BREAKING: Trump Makes 1 Move in Staff Shakeup That May End His Campaign

Billionaire businessman Donald Trump has been forced to face the reality that his lack of a campaign apparatus is his most damaging vulnerability.

To correct this, he has announced a $20 million campaign to put staff on the ground in upcoming primary states, according to Politico.

While Trump has been focused on using free media to gain the attention of voters, his lack of outreach to delegates has left him with a possibility of a loss at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland this July.

Now Trump’s former national field director Stuart Jolly has left the campaign, apparently in protest of the new organization, leaving an even greater divide between original Trump staffers loyal to Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, and the new team of Paul Manafort and Rick Wiley

Wiley was previously on the staff of Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin and was hired by Manafort.

The new move may deteriorate whatever field organization Trump already has and alienate the true believers with the injection of more typical political field operatives, known for ignoring grassroots activists and instead embracing establishment figures and elected officials.

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This may come at the worst possible moment, as the convention will likely produce a nominee based on the passion and willingness of their campaign’s representatives to cut deals in order to ensure their candidate comes out on top. If Trump loses the momentum he has because of this, he could see himself popular among the general public but hated by those attending the convention.

This would mean an almost certain Trump loss among the delegates.

Trump’s lack of preparedness has put him in the unusually compromising position of winning states but losing delegates in those states to people he beat. In some cases delegates that he should have won have been pledged to candidates who have subsequently dropped out of the race.

All signs point to this being a cause for great concern in field operation and a likely justification for whatever bad may come from the move within the campaign, as Trump himself has been acting as campaign manager and chief media strategist.

On the other hand, Trump obviously won big in Tuesday’s New York primary and seems to be set up to come out on top in the several states with primary voting on April 26. That momentum may be enough to see him through.